Monday, July 16, 2012

The Venus of Willendorf

Previous posting about same matter
http://bohemian-world.blogspot.com/2009/09/venus-of-willendorf.html


source for this article :http://www.ancientcraft.co.uk/reenactment/pa_venus_willendorf.html

The Venus of Willendorf

  • Age: Around 25,000 BCE
  • Material: Oolitic Limestone
  • Found: Willendorf (Austria) in 1908
  • Present Location: Naturhistorisches Museum in Vienna (Austria)
  • Length: 10.6cm
  • Width: 5.7cm
  • Depth: 4.5cm
(move cursor over images to magnify replica)
 
The Venus of Willendorf was one of three such figurines
recovered from Palaeolithic archaeological sites at Willendorf in Austria
, which were temporary settlements of the Gravettian culture.
A characteristic of the Paleolithic "Venus" figurines exhibited by the Willendorf figurine
is the lack of any detail of a face and the lack of feet below the ankle.
She was carved from a fine porous oolitic limestone
, not locally found and therefore must have been imported to the area.
It is impossible to determine if the carving was local to the area or not.
The Venus was originally painted with red ochre and is sometimes described as a Mother Goddess.
There is some debate regarding decoration on the figurines head
, as to whether it is a basketwork or woven headress or an elaborate braided hairstyle.
She was unearthed by worker Johann Veran, about 30m above the River Danube, during the Wachau railway construction in 1908, then identified by Austrian archaeologist Josef Szombathy. Wilendorf had already been known as a Palaeolithic site for over 20 years before systematic excavations by Josef Szombathy, Josef Bayer and Hugo Obermaier began.
 

Thursday, July 12, 2012

Stromae - Alors On Danse (multi-version)


 We go to class to get a job
A job for scraps to beat the odds
Odds are in, you're in the Red
Thanks to credit you're in debt
The debt's a foot in your mouth

A lawyer man can't work it out
You get a wife and have some kids
Happy until your wife splits
Hits the fan
Your on the road
Problem solved / comes in droves
Your so tied you can 't sleep
Counting meals instead of sheep
Out of faith not of luck...
The wheels are frickin stuck
Tuck it up
Tuck it in
Life goes on

Alors on danse...
Alors On Danse
Alors On Danse
Alors On Danse
Alors On Danse
Alors On Danse
Alors On Danse
Alors On Danse
Alors On Danse

You tell yourself to push ahead
Pushing more than bargained for
This ain't no movie
There's no script
No Audience
No with your life on court
Looking for a higher ground
Till the ground looks so bad
Bad enough will lose your grip

I think my mind is playing tricks
Tricks on me tricks on you
Tricks on us
What can we do
Sing the song
The body wants
The body wants

Alors on chante
Lalalalalala, Lalalalalala,
Alors on chante
Lalalalalala, Lalalalalala

Alors on chante
Alors on chante
Et puis seulement quand c'est fini, alors on danse.
Alors On Danse
We dance the pain away
Alors On Danse
We dance the pain away
Alors On Danse
We dance the pain away
Alors On Danse
We dance the pain away
Alors On Danse
We dance the pain away
Alors On Danse
We dance the pain away
Alors On Danse
We dance the pain away

Alors On Danse
We dance the pain away

Et ben y en a encore

Et ben y en a encore

Et ben y en a encore

Et ben y en a encore

Et ben y en a encore

Monday, July 2, 2012

Bizarre Top 10 Bizarre Mental Disorders


Mental disorders effect millions of people in the world and can lead to years of psychotherapy. In some cases, the psychological problem suffered is extremely rare or bizarre. This is a list of the ten most bizarre mental disorders.
10. Stockholm Syndrome
Hearst
Stockholm syndrome is a psychological response sometimes seen in an abducted hostage, in which the hostage shows signs of sympathy, loyalty or even voluntary compliance with the hostage taker, regardless of the risk in which the hostage has been placed. The syndrome is also discussed in other cases, including those of wife-beating, rape and child abuse.
The syndrome is named after a bank robbery in Stockholm, Sweden, in which the bank robbers held bank employees hostage from August 23 to August 28 in 1973. In this case, the victims became emotionally attached to their victimizers, and even defended their captors after they were freed from their six-day ordeal, refusing to testify against them. Later, after the gang were tried and sentenced to jail, one of them married a woman who had been his hostage.
A famous example of Stockholm syndrome is the story of Patty Hearst, a millionaire’s daughter who was kidnapped in 1974, seemed to develop sympathy with her captors, and later took part in a robbery they were orchestrating.
9. Lima Syndrome
Limamrta
The exact opposite of Stockholm syndrome – this is where the hostage takers become more sympathetic to the plights and needs of the hostages.
It is named after the Japanese embassy hostage crisis in Lima, Peru where 14 members of the Tupac Amaru Revolutionary Movement (MRTA) took hundreds of people hostage at a party at the official residence of Japan’s ambassador to Peru. The hostages consisted of diplomats, government and military officials, and business executives of many nationalities who happened to be at the party at the time. It began on December 17, 1996 and ended on April 22, 1997.
Within a few days of the hostage crisis, the militants had released most of the captives, with seeming disregard for their importance, including the future President of Peru, and the mother of the current President.
After months of unsuccessful negotiations, all remaining hostages were freed by a raid by Peruvian commandos, although one hostage was killed.
8. Diogenes Syndrome
Diogenes
Diogenes was an ancient Greek philosopher, who lived in a wine barrel and promoted ideas of nihilism and animalism. Famously, when he was asked by Alexander the Great what he wanted most in the world, he replied, “For you to get out of my sunlight!”
Diogenes syndrome is a condition characterised by extreme self neglect, reclusive tendencies, and compulsive hoarding, sometimes of animals. It is found mainly in old people and is associated with senile breakdown.
The syndrome is actually a misnomer since Diogenes lived an ascetic and transient life, and there are no sources to indicate that he neglected is own hygiene.
7. Paris Syndrome
Paris
Paris syndrome is a condition exclusive to Japanese tourists and nationals, which causes them to have a mental breakdown while in the famous city. Of the millions of Japanese tourists that visit the city every year, around a dozen suffer this illness and have to be returned to their home country.
The condition is basically a severe form of ‘culture shock’. Polite Japanese tourists who come to the city are unable to separate their idyllic view of the city, seen in such films as Amelie, with the reality of a modern, bustling metropolis.
Japanese tourists who come into contact with, say, a rude French waiter, will be unable to argue back and be forced to bottle up their own anger which eventually leads to a full mental breakdown.
The Japanese embassy has a 24hr hotline for tourists suffering for severe culture shock, and can provide emergency hospital treatment if necessary.
You can read a much more indepth article on Paris syndrome here.
6. Stendhal Syndrome
Stendhal
Stendhal Syndrome is a psychosomatic illness that causes rapid heartbeat, dizziness, confusion and even hallucinations when an individual is exposed to art, usually when the art is particularly ‘beautiful’ or a large amount of art is in a single place. The term can also be used to describe a similar reaction to a surfeit of choice in other circumstances, e.g. when confronted with immense beauty in the natural world.
It is named after the famous 19th century French author Stendhal who described his experience with the phenomenon during his 1817 visit to Florence, Italy in his book Naples and Florence: A Journey from Milan to Reggio.
You can read a much more indepth article on stendhal syndrome here.





5. Jerusalem Syndrome
Jerusalem
The Jerusalem syndrome is the name given to a group of mental phenomena involving the presence of either religiously themed obsessive ideas, delusions or other psychosis-like experiences that are triggered by, or lead to, a visit to the city of Jerusalem. It is not endemic to one single religion or denomination, but has affected Jews and Christians of many different backgrounds.
The condition seems to emerge while in Jerusalem and causes psychotic delusions which tend to dissipate after a few weeks. Of all the people who have suffered this spontaneous psychosis, all have had a history of previous mental illness, or where deemed not to have been ‘well’ before coming to the city.
You can read a much more indepth article on Jerusalem syndrome here.
4. Capgras Delusion
Capgras
The Capgras delusion is a rare disorder in which a person holds a delusional belief that an acquaintance, usually a spouse or other close family member, has been replaced by an identical looking impostor.
It is most common in patients with schizophrenia, although it occur in those with dementia, or after a brain injury.
One case report said the following:
Mrs. D, a 74-year old married housewife, recently discharged from a local hospital after her first psychiatric admission, presented to our facility for a second opinion. At the time of her admission earlier in the year, she had received the diagnosis of atypical psychosis because of her belief that her husband had been replaced by another unrelated man. She refused to sleep with the impostor, locked her bedroom and door at night, asked her son for a gun, and finally fought with the police when attempts were made to hospitalize her. At times she believed her husband was her long deceased father. She easily recognized other family members and would misidentify her husband only.
The paranoia induced by this condition has made it a common tool in science fiction books and films, such as Invasion of the Body Snatchers, Total Recall and The Stepford Wives.
3. Fregoli Delusion
Fregoli
The exact opposite of the Capgras delusion – the Fregoli delusion is a rare disorder in which a person holds a delusional belief that different people are in fact a single person who changes appearance or is in disguise.
The condition is named after the Italian actor Leopoldo Fregoli who was renowned for his ability to make quick changes of appearance during his stage act.
It was first reported 1927 by two psychiatrists who discussed the case study of a 27 year old woman who believed that she was being persecuted by two actors whom she often went to see at the theatre. She believed that these people “pursued her closely, taking the form of people she knows or meets.”
2. Cotard Delusion
Cotard
The Cotard delusion is a rare psychiatric disorder in which a person holds a delusional belief that he or she is dead, does not exist, is putrefying or has lost their blood or internal organs. Rarely, it can include delusions of immortality.
One case study said the following:
[The patient's] symptoms occurred in the context of more general feelings of unreality and being dead. In January, 1990, after his discharge from hospital in Edinburgh, his mother took him to South Africa. He was convinced that he had been taken to hell (which was confirmed by the heat), and that he had died of septicaemia (which had been a risk early in his recovery), or perhaps from AIDS (he had read a story in The Scotsman about someone with AIDS who died from septicaemia), or from an overdose of a yellow fever injection. He thought he had “borrowed my mother’s spirit to show me round hell”, and that he was asleep in Scotland.
It is named after Jules Cotard, a French neurologist who first described the condition, which he called “le délire de négation” (“negation delirium”), in a lecture in Paris in 1880.
1. Reduplicative Paramnesia
Trumanparamnesia
Reduplicative paramnesia is the delusional belief that a place or location has been duplicated, existing in two or more places simultaneously, or that it has been ‘relocated’ to another site. For example, a person may believe that they are in fact not in the hospital to which they were admitted, but an identical-looking hospital in a different part of the country, despite this being obviously false, as one case study reported:
A few days after admission to the Neurobehavioural Center, orientation for time was intact, he could give details of the accident (as related to him by others), could remember his doctors’ names and could learn new information and retain it indefinitely. He exhibited, however, a distinct abnormality of orientation for place. While he quickly learned and remembered that he was at the Jamaica Plain Veterans Hospital (also known as the Boston Veterans Administration Hospital), he insisted that the hospital was located in Taunton, Massachusetts, his home town. Under close questioning, he acknowledged that Jamaica Plain was part of Boston and admitted it would be strange for there to be two Jamaica Plain Veterans Hospitals. Nonetheless, he insisted that he was presently hospitalized in a branch of the Jamaica Plain Veterans Hospital located in Taunton. At one time he stated that the hospital was located in the spare bedroom of his house.
The term ‘reduplicative paramnesia’ was first used in 1903 by the Czechoslovakian neurologist Arnold Pick to describe a condition in a patient with suspected Alzheimer’s disease who insisted that she had been moved from Pick’s city clinic, to one she claimed looked identical but was in a familiar suburb. To explain the discrepancy she further claimed that Pick and the medical staff worked at both locations
Contributor: JT

Sunday, July 1, 2012

Evolutionary Needs [ what do men want vs women ]

Evolutionary Needs

Explanations > Needs > Evolutionary Needs

One of the basic and perhaps most degrading tenets of Darwinian evolution, which was expounded by Richard Dawkins in 'The Selfish Gene', is that we are little more than 'gene machines'. Seen from a fundamentalist evolutionary sense, our sole purpose in life is to propagating our genes, and our needs are honed to relentlessly drive us in this direction.

Staying alive

The first step towards procreation is in staying healthy and alive. This means finding food and shelter and, if necessary, beating other people in order to get it.

Finding a mate

Once we are reasonably secure, the next step towards procreating our genes is finding a mate (and doing the deed, of course).
For this, we again may need to beat off other suitors, or at least impress our potential partners sufficiently that they choose to mate with us rather than our genetic competitors.
The fact that the male is larger than the female is a common sign that humans are naturally a male-dominated society in which dominant males will have more than one mate. The larger male is not only better able to fight off other males, but they are also able to keep women in their place. The force of genetics sadly does not know about Political Correctness.

What men want 

Men and women look for different things in their partners. Men look for women who seem likely to be able to bear plenty of strong children. They thus look for women who:
  • are young and healthy and have many childbearing years ahead of them.
  • have large breasts for feeding their children.
  • have wide hips so they will not have delivery problems.
Men are also easily fooled by symbolism such as red lipstick that reminds them of a full vagina and make-up that fills in the cracks and makes the woman look younger than she is.
Men are not monogamous by nature, and a man will happily have children with many women, as this spreads his seed around and increases the chances of successful propagation of his genes.

What women want

Women are not like men. A major difference is that they are generally left to bring up the children, giving them ten to twenty years of work after their debilitating nine months of pregnancy. They thus look for men who:
  • are strong and powerful and can feed and protect them and their children.
  • are kind and thoughtful and will stay with them.
Women thus will settle for older men who have gained affluence and position in society and who may be less likely to stray. They fight other women not with strength, but with cunning and carefully-placed words (which they also use to great effect with men).
Women are not predisposed toward sleeping around, as the result cannot be hidden from their mates and having too many children may kill them or otherwise reduce the chances of their children surviving.

Nurturing our young

It is no good having children if we then let them die before they can pass their genes on to their children. We thus are motivated to look after our children at least until they can fly the nest. This can be a difficult transition, but nature again has provided the answer in adolescence, where our teenagers push back so hard and often that we are relieved to see them set out on their own!

The next generation

Being a grandparent is a very satisfying thing, as you now have proof that your genes have been passed on and that the responsibility for their propagation can now be handed back to your children whenever you get a bit tired.

So what?

Sex sells. This is because it appeals to this most basic of needs. Use sexy women to sell to men and powerful men to sell to women. Create tension by showing the opposite sex being won away by another person. Show perfect bodies and promise 'you, too, can have a body like this'.
Children sell too. Awaken nurturing instincts by showing their innocence and vulnerability.

See also

Why Do Men Like Big Hips and Big Breasts




Chart on Male Mating Choices
 

The following (including the graphics) is from  

“The Evolution of Human Mating,” by David M. Buss
of the University of Texas, Austin, in 2007: 

“Evolutionary psychology provides a powerful theory for the evolution of standards of female beauty—whatever observable cues are linked with fertility 
(immediate probability of conception) or reproductive value (future reproductive potential) 

will evolve to become part of what humans find attractive in females. 

These include cues to youth, such as full lips, smooth skin, lustrous hair, and a low ratio of hips to waist (WHR). 

They also include cues to health, such as clear skin, absence of sores, white teeth, and symmetrical features. 

Beauty, in short, is in the “psychological adaptations of the beholder,” 
and men value physical appearance because of the wealth of information 
it provides about a woman’s youth, health, and hence reproductive capacity.”
Cues that influence male mating selection 

It’s fun to play with, the evolutionary biology model — this newfound substance, a putty or clay that molds to any texture and shape. The problem, however, with books such as Geoffrey Miller’s The Mating Mind, or even On the Origin of Stories by our own Auckland-based Brian Boyd — books which seek to sculpt poetic subjects using evolutionary materials — is that they can sound so plausible and compelling, so theoretically interesting and eye-opening, and yet, in the end, add so little of beauty to the subject they discuss.
Although most evolutionary biologists continue to focus on “fitness factors” in human mating choices (see, for example, the work of David C. Geary, Jacob Vigil, and Jennifer Byrd-Craven University of Missouri-Columbia), I should note that several years after writing the above stanzas in Kamal, I was pleased to read, in a reputable science publication, a proposition very similar to my own.

Source :
http://voices.yahoo.com/evolution-why-men-prefer-big-breasts-curvy-hips-8965677.html